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Rolling Terrace Awarded $1,500 Grant for Adapted P.E. Equipment


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In the last three years, Charles Silberman has secured $20,000 in grant money for his school, Rolling Terrace Elementary School. The largest was from Dick’s Sporting Goods for $5,000; three smaller grants were through the MCPS Educational Foundation. All went toward various P.E. equipment; some helped to replace 25-year-old gymnastics equipment.

The latest grant, awarded just last month, was the $1,500 Tommy Wilson Memorial Grant from SHAPE (Society of Health and Physical Educators) America. Silberman, P.E. teacher at Rolling Terrace, partnered with the MCPS Educational Foundation in securing the grant. Named for a child with cerebral palsy who passed away at the age of 16, the grant supports recreational programs for students with disabilities.

“I’m excited about it and proud of it,” Silberman said of the national grant. “It’s nice to be recognized, but it’s really about the kids and what we’re able to do to help them.”

Silberman says Rolling Terrace will use the money to purchase adapted P.E. equipment for students with disabilities, however all of its students will be able to use the equipment.

“I just want to do things to remove barriers and improve access for our students,” he said. A Title I school, Rolling Terrace has a 90 percent FARMS rate, 62 percent of its students are Emerging Multilingual Learners, and more than 10 percent have IEPs. The equipment will help students address many needs, including sensory and spatial awareness, fine and gross motor skills, hearing impairments and other physical disabilities, including wheelchair-bound students. The school also supports a preschool inclusion program, which offers pre-K classes and services for 3-to-5-year-old children with disabilities.

“The equipment will support all of our students and their abilities so that everyone can have access to the curriculum,” Silberman said. “It can be used with any unit of study.” Adapted P.E. equipment is costly, and the school’s annual equipment budget is typically between $1 and $2 per student, funding that is typically used to replace broken, lost or unsuitable equipment. “These grants can be extremely critical to fill in needs,” he said.

Silberman encourages other teachers to reach out to the MCPS Educational Foundation, which he called a “godsend” in helping him obtain the grant for Rolling Terrace.

“Teachers are busy doing lots of things,” he said. “Grant writing is a process and it takes time. [Teachers] may not be aware of the foundation and how helpful they are or even that there are grants out there that they can apply to.”